Monday, February 27, 2017

things always come back to bite you in the ass

Well this women at least will not lower herself to do porn ...or reality ......maybe she has a gram of dignity ......but has no identity ...trying to be black and ashamed becasue she was white .......i can understand her a tad ......white people can be embarrasing as hell .....especailly watching them dance .....that is bad ,......however she is going down the tubes ...maybe she wants to hit rock bottom.....but at the end of the day she can always do a porn flick .........i personally do not wanna see her get fucked in a video ....i find her quite unattractive ....maye she might clean up after her homeless escapade .....who knows ........who cares ....does anyone want to see her get slammed in a porno ....she could always go and work for those cunts at the CNN....they obvioulsy will take on anyone

Rachel Dolezal, the white woman who became infamous for identifying herself as a black woman for decades and running the Spokane, Washington, chapter of the NAACP, is jobless and fears she may soon be homeless.

In an interview with The Guardian about her upcoming memoir “In Full Color: Finding My Place in a Black and White World,” Dolezal says she’s jobless, has only been offered employment in reality television and porn films, feeds her family with food stamps and doesn’t know how she’ll come up with her March rent. She says that although she has applied for more than 100 jobs, no one will hire her even to stock shelves.

“Right now the only place that I feel understood and completely accepted is with my kids and my sister,” she said, claiming she can currently count the number of friends she has left in Spokane on her fingers.

Dolezal’s life began to unravel two years ago when a TV reporter asked her, “Are you African American?” and she turned from the camera and fled. Shortly thereafter, her Caucasian parents came forward with photos of her childhood as a freckle-faced blonde and claims that her roots are German and Czech, with traces of Native American ancestry.

Time has passed but wounds have not healed — she lost her jobs with the NAACP and Eastern Washington University, most of her family and friends are estranged, and the respect she had earned for her civil rights activism turned into disgrace.

“There’s no protected class for me,” she told The Guardian. “I’m this generic, ambiguous scapegoat for white people to call me a race traitor and take out their hostility on. And I’m a target for anger and pain about white people from the black community. It’s like I am the worst of all these worlds.”

“No, I don’t,” she replied, when asked if she thinks she had done anything wrong. “I’m not going to stoop and apologize and grovel and feel bad about it. I would just be going back to when I was little, and had to be what everybody else told me I should be — to make them happy.”

“In Full Color: Finding My Place in a Black and White World” will be available on March 28.